Kentucky man pleads guilty in 8-year-old’s shooting death

A Kentucky man who said barbecue sauce caused a gun to slip out of his hands and then discharge in the shooting death of an 8-year-old boy has taken a plea deal.

WDRB reported 21-year-old Elgin Anders pleaded guilty on Monday to reckless homicide for the fatal shooting of 8-year-old Andre Lamont O’Neal Jr. and will most likely face either two years in prison or four years of probation.

The shooting occurred in January 2016 at a Louisville cookout, after which Anders said the gun had slipped out of his hands and then discharged when it hit the ground.

“We was grilling and everything,” Anders said. “I came out and looked at the grill, had a little BBQ sauce on my fingers. I licked the sauce off my fingers [and] it slipped straight out of my fingers.”

Court records show differing accounts of the shooting. Some corroborate Anders’ story that his .357 magnum revolver fell to the ground and then discharged, while a juvenile witness said Anders pointed the gun before it fired.

Andre’s Aunt, Gina O’Neal, does not believe Anders story and feels justice has not been served.

“It hurts so bad to know that the justice system failed us,” O’Neal said. “He gets to walk around free. … Baby Dre won’t have another day with us.”

Andre’s grandfather, Luther Brown, is a gun safety activist in Louisville and encourages all gun owners in the community to use gun locks and safely store their guns. As reported by the Lexington Herald Leader, Brown thinks harsher sentences must be doled out to those responsible for child shootings.

“The problem is, we don’t take these deaths seriously,” Brown said. “People leave their guns out, bam, a child is dead, but it’s just an accident. People drop their guns, bam, a child is dead, but it’s just an accident. You were careless and now a child is dead, but hey, we won’t charge you with a crime, we think you’ve suffered enough. If we charge you with anything, maybe you get a year.”

I am confused. Most, if not all, modern firearms have internal safety devices to prevent discharge when dropped. .Even my WW-II vintage S&W revolver has a mechanism to keep the hammer from striking the cartridge unless the trigger is retracted.

Can someone explain the probable mechanism for the weapon discharging upon simply being dropped? I am sure I am missing something, I am just not sure what.

Omer Woodruff

Don’t blame the good guys with guns for what stupid people do with guns . Just like some people know the left lane is for passing and stupid people cause car accidents because they are too stupid to know the left lane is for passing .

IamThe Ghost

At the BBQ event, where the murderer had “slippery sauce fingers”: Why was the gun drawn? Why did he need to have it in his hand(s)? I would sure like to know the stance of the victim and the angle of bullet entry into his body.